MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter comes before the court on cross motions for summary judgment. No material facts are in dispute and the case is ripe for disposition by summary judgment. The court has considered the authorities, the arguments of the parties and the entire record, and finds that plaintiffs’ motion should be granted and defendants’ motion denied.
Acting as attorneys for the estate of Hanna Kenmitz, the defendants determined that the estate should be distributed per stirpes to the decedent’s four surviving nieces and nephews. The estate was adjudicated in formal testacy proceedings in New Mexico District Court, with the plaintiffs, brother and sister, each receiving one-sixth of the estate while their cousins received one-third each. Unfortunately, the New Mexico Probate Code provides that distribution should have been made on a per capita basis. §§ 45-2-103 and 45-2-106 N.M.Stat.Ann. (1978).
The time for appealing the Order of Distribution having run when plaintiffs discovered the error in distribution, plaintiffs unsuccessfully attempted to recover the improperly distributed property in proceedings in state court.
In Re Kemnitz,
RES JUDICATA/COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL
Defendants assert that the adjudication in the formal testacy proceedings is conclusive, therefore, the prosecution of this litigation is barred by either res judicata or collateral estoppel. Res judicata is clearly inapplicable; the causes of action in this suit and the testacy proceedings are not the same. Whether the doctrine of collateral estoppel requires dismissal is a more troublesome issue.
Although it is not in dispute, an essential element of plaintiffs’ case is a showing that defendants were negligent. Defendants admit that they caused the estate to be improperly distributed, but they argue that since the distribution issue has already been litigated in a court with proper jurisdiction, where it was necessarily determined and finally decided, plaintiffs are now estopped from asserting the distribution was incorrect. The essence of collateral estoppel is that when a factual issue has been finally decided by a court of competent jurisdiction between the same parties or their privies, it may not be relitigated in a subsequent proceeding based on a different cause of action. IB Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 0.441[2], p. 3777 (1982). The purpose of the doctrine is to preclude repeated controversy of matters that have been once judicially determined in order “to save individuals and courts from the waste and burden of relitigating old issues.” IB Moore’s at p. 3779.
While collateral estoppel is a useful and necessary tool, it can be dangerously broad if mechanically applied.
“Because the effect of collateral estoppel, unlike that of res judicata, is not limited to the cause of action asserted in the initial suit, but extends to other claims arising between the parties, unforeseeable and sometimes unjust results are possible, especially if the doctrine is applied without some degree of flexibility.”
See also
Johnson v. United States,
Plaintiffs contend that collateral estoppel is inapplicable because defendants were not parties to the probate proceedings. Although the doctrine of mutuality has been renounced by many jurisdictions in recent years, New Mexico still firmly adheres to it.
Poorbaugh v. Mullen,
Even assuming that
Brown
requires this court to disregard New Mexico’s mutuality requirement, collateral estoppel still
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does not bar plaintiffs’ recovery. The issue whether collateral estoppel bars an action for legal malpractice that occurred in a prior suit arises in an analogous manner when an attorney fails to timely file a notice of appeal and is sued by his client. The court hearing the malpractice action must necessarily rule on the propriety of the first court’s final judgment in order to determine the merits of the dismissed appeal. This is uniformly allowed and is not considered a collateral attack on the first judgment.
Pete v. Henderson,
Defendants cite
DiMauro v. Pavia,
Furthermore, application of collateral estoppel under these circumstances would not further the purpose of that doctrine. Relitigation of issues once decided would not be prevented; neither the individuals involved nor this court would be spared any time or expense. The parties agree that the estate was improperly distributed so no litigation of this issue is necessary. The doctrine of collateral estoppel, therefore, does not require dismissal of plaintiffs’ claim.
ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP
Defendants’ second line of defense consists of the argument that because there was no attorney-client relationship between the parties, defendants owed plaintiffs no duty and cannot be held liable for their mistake. Plaintiffs concede that there was no attorney-client relationship, but contend that no such relationship is required in New Mexico to recover for legal malpractice. Both sides rely on
Holland v. Lawless,
The plaintiff in Holland v. Lawless had entered into an agreement for a lease with an option to buy with an administrator of an estate, through the estate’s attorney, defendant Lawless. When Holland sought specific performance of the agreement, his petition was dismissed because neither the administrator nor the attorney had the authority to enter an agreement to sell the estate’s property. Holland then sued Lawless for legal malpractice, negligence and misrepresentation.
Holland’s legal malpractice claim was dismissed because there was no attorney-client relationship. The negligence claim was dismissed for the same reason, the court remarking that “there is no showing that Lawless owed plaintiff a duty .... ”
Without privity of contract, the State’s courts have looked to other criteria for limitations on tort liability. In rejecting privity of contract, New Mexico’s Supreme Court expressly referenced a California line of cases in which a multiple factor balancing test is used instead of privity of contract. The factors are,
“the extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the plaintiff, the foreseeability of harm to him, the degree of certainty that he suffered injury, the closeness of the connection between the defendant’s conduct and the injury suffered, and the policy of preventing future harm.”
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Steinberg,
At first glance, the rulings of the Court of Appeals on Holland’s legal malpractice and negligence claims are perplexing in light of New Mexico’s unconcern with privity of contract. As to the legal malpractice claim, however, Holland was apparently asserting that an attorney-client relationship existed. The Court of Appeals was merely affirming the lower court’s grant of summary judgment on that factual issue when Holland failed to introduce any evidence of the relationship. The Court also affirmed dismissal of the negligence count on the ground that Lawless owed no duty to Holland and no attorney-client relationship existed. It is important to note that the Court did not preclude Holland from demonstrating that some basis for a duty existed other than the attorney-client relationship; it simply reiterated that the attorney-client relationship basis did not exist. Furthermore, because of his position as attorney for the estate, Lawless’ duty as an attorney was to his client and not to the party with whom the estate was contracting.
Costello v. Wells Fargo Bank,
The court is convinced that
Holland v. Lawless
does not require the dismissal of plaintiffs’ claim for lack of an attorney-client relationship and that, on these facts, New Mexico law dictates that defendants owed plaintiffs a duty of due care. There being no dispute that defendants’ failure to observe the statutory scheme of distribution is a breach of the standard of care required of an attorney, summary judgment will be granted for the plaintiffs as to the principal element of damages. To insure their just compensation, plaintiffs will be awarded interest at the statutory rate from the time of the erroneous distribution.
State Trust & Savings Bank
v.
Hermosa Land & Cattle Co.,
